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Lost one this Morning
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<blockquote data-quote="J Hoy" data-source="post: 1758271" data-attributes="member: 16398"><p>Nope, I said, "VETERINARIANS say bones grow to normal if they are genetically programmed to be normal." You just took what you wanted from my statement - that is not fair at all. From my measurements of over 1000 animals' bite, it did not appear that what they said was correct. How did so many different species of mammal and bird suddenly get damaged genes in the parents all at the same time? All of the research scientists I asked, said it was not possible genetically for so many animals to suddenly have the same birth defect, so the cause had to be environmental, not genetic. Some newborns of the following domestic animals were observed or reported to me to have been born with an underbite beginning in spring of 1995 and in every year since (overbite was not as prevalent but was observed on domestic goats): cattle, bison, sheep, goats, horses, mules, llama, dogs that were not genetically bred to have an underbite, cats and likely something I am forgetting.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J Hoy, post: 1758271, member: 16398"] Nope, I said, "VETERINARIANS say bones grow to normal if they are genetically programmed to be normal." You just took what you wanted from my statement - that is not fair at all. From my measurements of over 1000 animals' bite, it did not appear that what they said was correct. How did so many different species of mammal and bird suddenly get damaged genes in the parents all at the same time? All of the research scientists I asked, said it was not possible genetically for so many animals to suddenly have the same birth defect, so the cause had to be environmental, not genetic. Some newborns of the following domestic animals were observed or reported to me to have been born with an underbite beginning in spring of 1995 and in every year since (overbite was not as prevalent but was observed on domestic goats): cattle, bison, sheep, goats, horses, mules, llama, dogs that were not genetically bred to have an underbite, cats and likely something I am forgetting. [/QUOTE]
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